The Gold Coast Bulletin

VaxVisa app verifies COVID-19 test results

- REON SUDDABY

AS vaccines roll out and the world looks to a future beyond COVID-19, a Bond University student has come up with a high-tech solution to help people travel safely around a post-pandemic planet.

Erika Harman, a dietitian now studying Bond’s Master of Healthcare Innovation­s, has worked with her partner to create VaxVisa, a technology solution providing verifiable digital certificat­es for vaccinatio­n and laboratory test results.

Ms Harman said she wanted to come up with a way for people who had returned negative COVID-19 test results, or who had been vaccinated, to continue with their lives in a way which would help authoritie­s to manage the ongoing threat of community transmissi­on of the virus.

“My partner and I were acutely aware that if people had the ability to provide verifiable proof of laboratory tests and vaccinatio­n results via a personal device accessible anywhere in real time, this would be a useful way of assisting authoritie­s to manage the COVID situation without the need for mass lockdowns and closing of businesses,” Ms Harman said.

“People without the disease who could still work, who could still contribute to the economy, had no way to prove they didn’t have the disease, so everything had to be shut, and that’s crippled economies and had very bad effects on people’s mental health.”

Ms Harman described VaxVisa as an app which displayed test results much like the digital boarding passes airlines use to check passengers on to a flight. VaxVisa would allow airlines to ensure a passenger’s most recent COVID-19 tests had come back negative or that they had received the vaccine before they boarded a flight.

The digital certificat­es could also be used by people to show their result to their employer, when entering a sports stadium, or at other events.

Ms Harman said VaxVisa used technology which incorporat­ed best practice security and privacy systems based on open standards and open source software already in use in health systems around the world, and which had the flexibilit­y to provide tailormade solutions to meet the requiremen­ts of different health authoritie­s or government­s.

“All we’re wanting to do is provide digital certificat­es which are verifiable for whatever test health authoritie­s say they need,” she said.

“After this, if we can ever see a way out of the fog with COVID-19, our technology will be able to do the same for any other travel vaccinatio­n.”

VaxVisa took out second place in Bond University’s Transforme­r Launch Pad entreprene­urship competitio­n, winning $1000 to go towards developmen­t of the product.

Ms Harman, who utilised Bond’s Transforme­r entreprene­urship hub while working on VaxVisa, said she was delighted to be recognised in the Launch Pad contest.

“I was really chuffed. Never in a million years did I think this would get so far, but I don’t see it as a second, I think anyone who enters that competitio­n is a winner.”

 ??  ?? Erika Harman has worked with her partner to create VaxVisa, a tech solution providing verifiable digital certificat­es for vaccinatio­n and lab test results.
Erika Harman has worked with her partner to create VaxVisa, a tech solution providing verifiable digital certificat­es for vaccinatio­n and lab test results.

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